今叔利

  • Talks and Lectures

Islamic Humanism

This lecture will discuss how developing themes found in theQuranand culled from Greek and Jewish, Indian and other sources, Muslim thinkers forged a compelling humanism, precious in the classical age and deserving recovery and reconstruction in our own. The literary form of the risla(or essay), which developed from the letter writing familiar to the secretarial class, significantly contributed to Islamic humanism. For the informality of a letter overcomes the stiffness of a treatise, the intensity of oratory the and sidesteps the agonistic potential of many a dialogical exchange.

The intimacy of address to a friend establishes a sense of privacy and confidentiality even as it modestly vouches for the need that publication seeks to serve. So we readily appreciate the use of the rislaform in the philosophical essays of al-Kind朝 and in those of the Ikhwn al-畊af幣, where Indian fables mingle with Greek philosophy and science, Arabic lore and poetry. Ibn ufayl and Maimonides in his wake adopt the rislaform for just these reasons. The intimacy of the rislais a natural setting for the moral counsels of virtue ethics developed in more systematic form by Miskawayh on the model established by Yay b. Ad朝 and naturalised in the context of Sufi pietism by al-Ghazl朝. Virtue ethics softens the command ethics of scripture and thematizes ethical concerns in terms of the refinement of character, whose anatomy natural history of strengths and weaknesses Islamic moralists view with a hygienic eye. Tad朝b, the Arabic counterpart of the Greek paideia relies on the pedagogical value of literature and history to convey lessons better learned from shared than from personal experience.

Beyond the intimacy of the rislaand the refinement of tad朝b we should consider the commitment to evidence and argument that are the ideals of science and philosophy, part of the heritage of the great Islamic inquirers. Al-Frb朝 speaks for those commitments when he criticizes the mutakallim笛n for their invocation of ad hoc assumptions. But we can see the interplay of pre-philosophical with philosophical commitments when al-Frb朝 rejects Asharite determinism for its moral and theological deficits, just as we can see it in al-Rz朝s strenuous efforts to save (what he takes to be a Platonizing version of) divine creation and again in Ibn S朝ns doctrines of the worlds contingency and the individuation of disembodied souls. In all of these cases, and even in al-Rz朝s view that evils outweigh goods in this life, what drives the argument, even in the face of intellectualism is a humanism rooted in the affirmation of individual moral responsibility and accountability and the inestimable worth of the human person.

Speaker

Professor Lenn Goodman

Lenn E. Goodman, D. Phil., is a Professor of Philosophy and Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities at Vanderbilt University. His many books includeReligious Pluralism and Values in the Public Sphere(Cambridge University Press, 2014);Coming to Mind: The Soul and its Body(with D. G. Caramenico, University of Chicago Press, 2013);Creation and Evolution(Routledge, 2010); his Gifford Lectures,Love Thy Neighbor as Thyself(Oxford University Press, 2008);In Defense of Truth: A Pluralistic Approach(Humanity Press, 2001);Jewish and Islamic Philosophy: Crosspollinations in the Classic Age(Edinburgh University Press Rutgers University Press, 1999);Avicenna(Cornell University Press, 2006),Ibn Tufayls Hayy Ibn Yaqzan(University of Chicago Press, 2009) and of courseIslamic Humanism(Oxford University Press, 2003); and (with Richard McGregor)The Case of the Animals vs Man Before the King of the Jinn, the 22nd of the Ras但il of the Ikhw但n al-Saf但(Oxford University Press, 2009), the first volume to appear in the Institutes multi-volume collection of complete Ras但il.